Post-Liberation Disillusionment: Navigating Conflict and Identity in Tahmima Anam’s The Good Muslim
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31305/rrijm.2025.v10.n3.038Keywords:
Post-Liberation Disillusionment, Conflict, Identity, Neo-colonialism, MayaAbstract
Political independence often falls short of realizing the ideals of freedom, equality, and justice envisioned during anti-colonial struggles. In many cases, liberation merely replaces external domination with internal fractures and disillusionment. Tahmima Anam’s The Good Muslim (2011) poignantly reflects this post-liberation reality in Bangladesh, where the initial optimism of freedom is quickly overshadowed by conflict, repression, and competing visions of identity. Though the nation breaks free from the oppressive control of West Pakistan, it soon succumbs to neo-colonial structures within, as native elites reproduce systems of domination and silence dissent. Frantz Fanon’s critique of neo-colonialism illuminates this paradox: independence without genuine transformation fosters disillusionment and intensifies ideological and personal conflicts. Central to Anam’s narrative is Maya, whose unwavering commitment to justice, secular values, and civic responsibility places her in direct opposition to authoritarian rule, religious conservatism, and her brother Sohail’s retreat into orthodoxy. Her struggle for identity and belonging underscores the unfulfilled aspirations of liberation, revealing how the promises of freedom remain deferred in a nation still negotiating the contradictions of its postcolonial condition. Maya’s search is not for a fractured or imposed identity but for a secular, inclusive, and ethically grounded national identity that upholds justice, equality, and accountability.
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